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Kazi Nazrul Islam

Kazi Nazrul Islam (Bengali: কাজী নজরুল ইসলাম, pronounced [kaːd͡ʒi nod͡ʒrul ɪslam] (listen); 24 May 1899 – 29 August 1976) was a Bengali poet, writer, musician, and is the national poet of Bangladesh.[7] Nazrul is regarded as one of the greatest poets in Bengali literature. Popularly known as Nazrul, he produced a large body of poetry, music, messages, novels, stories, etc. with themes that included equality, justice, anti-imperialism, humanity, rebellion against oppression and religious devotion.[8] Nazrul's activism for political and social justice as well as writing a poem titled as "Bidrohī", meaning "the rebel" in Bengali, earned him the title of "Bidrohī Kôbi" (Rebel Poet).[9] His compositions form the avant-garde music genre of Nazrul Gīti (Music of Nazrul).[10][11][12][13]

Bidrohī Kôbi (Rebel Poet)
Kazi Nazrul Islam
কাজী নজরুল ইসলাম
Nazrul in Chittagong, 1926
Personal details
Born11 Joiṣṭhyô, 1306 Bônggabdô
(1899-05-26)26 May 1899[1][2]
Churulia, Asansol, Bengal Presidency, British India (present-day Paschim Bardhaman district, West Bengal, India)[2]
Died29 August 1976(1976-08-29) (aged 77)
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Resting placeMausoleum of Kazi Nazrul Islam
CitizenshipBritish Indian (1899 – 14 August 1947)
Indian (15 August 1947 – 29 August 1976)
Bangladeshi (18 February 1976–29 August 1976)[3]
Political partyWorkers and Peasants Party[4][5][6]
Spouses
  • Nargis Asar Khanum
    (m. 1921; div. 1937)
  • Pramila Devi
    (m. 1924; died 1962)
Children
Occupation
  • Poet
  • short-story writer
  • song composer
  • playwright
  • singer
  • flautist
  • novelist
  • essayist
  • literary translator
  • soldier
  • film actor
  • political activist
Awards
Signature
Nickname(s)Bengali: দুখুমিঞা, তারাক্ষ্যাপা, romanizedDukhumiañ, Tarakkhyapa
Military career
Allegiance British Empire
Service/branch British Indian Army
Years of service1917–1920
RankHavildar (Sergeant)
Unit49th Bengal Regiment
Battles/warsFirst World War

Born into a Bengali Muslim Kazi family hailing from Burdwan district in Bengal Presidency (now in West Bengal, India),[2] Nazrul Islam received religious education and as a young man worked as a muezzin at a local mosque. He learned about poetry, drama, and literature while working with the rural theatrical group Leṭor Dôl, Leṭo being a folk song genre of West Bengal[14] usually performed by the people from Muslim community of the region. He joined the British Indian Army in 1917 and was posted in Karachi. Nazrul established himself as a journalist in Calcutta after the war ended. He criticised the British Raj and called for revolution through his famous poetic works, such as "Bidrohī" ("বিদ্রোহী", 'The Rebel') and "Bhangar Gan" ("ভাঙ্গার গান", 'The Song of Destruction'),[15] as well as in his publication Dhūmketu ('The Comet'). His nationalist activism in Indian independence movement led to his frequent imprisonment by the colonial British authorities. While in prison, Nazrul wrote the "Rajbôndīr Jôbanbôndī" ("রাজবন্দীর জবানবন্দী", 'Deposition of a Political Prisoner').[16] His writings greatly inspired Bengalis of East Pakistan during the Bangladesh Liberation War.

Nazrul's writings explored themes such as freedom, humanity, love, and revolution. He opposed all forms of bigotry and fundamentalism, including religious, caste-based and gender-based.[17] Nazrul wrote short stories, novels, and essays but is best known for his songs and poems. He introduced the ghazal songs in Bengali language[18][19][20][21] and is also known for his extensive use of Arabic, Persian and Urdu words in his works.[22][23][24]

Nazrul wrote and composed music for nearly 4,000 songs (many recorded on HMV and gramophone records),[25] collectively known as Nazrul Gīti. In 1942 at the age of 43, he began to suffer from an unknown disease, losing his voice and memory. A medical team in Vienna diagnosed the disease as Pick's disease,[26] a rare incurable neurodegenerative disease. It caused Nazrul's health to decline steadily and forced him to live in isolation. He was also admitted in Ranchi (Jharkhand) psychiatric hospital for many years. At the invitation of the Government of Bangladesh, Nazrul's family took him to Bangladesh and moved to Dhaka in 1972. He died four years later on 29 August 1976.[20]

Early life

Nazrul was born on Wednesday 24 May 1899[27][28] in the village of Churulia, Asansol Sadar, Paschim Bardhaman district of the Bengal Presidency (now in West Bengal, India). He was born into a Bengali Muslim Kazi family and was the second of three sons and a daughter. Nazrul's father Kazi Faqeer Ahmed was the imam and caretaker of the local Pirpukur mosque and mausoleum of Haji Pahlawan.[29] Nazrul's mother was Zahida Khatun. Nazrul had two brothers, Kazi Saahibjaan and Kazi Ali Hussain, and a sister, Umme Kulsum. He was nicknamed Dukhu Miañ (দুখু মিঞা literally, 'the one with grief', or 'Mr. Sad Man'). Nazrul studied at a maktab and madrasa, run by a mosque and a dargah respectively, where he studied the Quran, Hadith, Islamic philosophy, and theology. His father died in 1908 and at the age of ten, Nazrul took his father's place as a caretaker of the mosque to support his family. He also assisted teachers in the school. He later worked as the muezzin at the mosque.[1][30]

Attracted to folk theatre, Nazrul joined a leto (travelling theatrical group) run by his uncle Fazle Karim. He worked and travelled with them, learning to act, as well as writing songs and poems for the plays and musicals.[27] Through his work and experiences, Nazrul began studying Bengali and Sanskrit literature, as well as Hindu scriptures such as the Puranas. Nazrul composed folk plays for the group, which included Chāshār Shōng ('the drama of a peasant'), and plays about characters from the Mahabharata including Shokunībōdh ('the Killing of Shakuni), Rājā Judhisthirer Shōng ('the drama of King Yudhishthira), Dātā Kōrno ('the philanthropic Karna'), Ākbōr Bādshāh ('Akbar the emperor'), Kobi Kālidās ('poet Kalidas'), Bidyan Hutum ('the learned owl'), and Rājputrer Shōng ('the prince's sorrow').[1]

In 1910, Nazrul left the troupe and enrolled at the Searsole Raj High School in Raniganj. In school, he was influenced by his teacher, a Jugantar activist, Nibaran Chandra Ghatak, and began a lifelong friendship with fellow author Sailajananda Mukhopadhyay, who was his classmate. He later transferred to the Mathrun High English School, studying under the headmaster and poet Kumud Ranjan Mullick. Unable to continue paying his school fees, Nazrul left the school and joined a group of kaviyals. Later he took jobs as a cook at Wahid's, a well-known bakery of the region, and at a tea stall in the town of Asansol. In 1914, Nazrul studied in the Darirampur School (now Jatiya Kabi Kazi Nazrul Islam University) in Trishal, Mymensingh District. Amongst other subjects, Nazrul studied Bengali, Sanskrit, Arabic, Persian literature and Hindustani classical music under teachers who were impressed by his dedication and skill.[1][31][32]

Nazrul studied up to grade 10 but did not appear for the matriculation pre-test examination; instead in 1917, he joined the British Indian Army at the age of eighteen. He had two primary motivations for joining the British Indian Army: first, a youthful desire for adventure and, second, an interest in the politics of the time.[33] Attached to the 49th Bengal Regiment, he was posted to the Karachi Cantonment, where he wrote his first prose and poetry. Although he never saw active fighting, he rose in rank from corporal to havildar (sergeant), and served as quartermaster for his battalion.[34]

During this period, Nazrul read extensively the works of Rabindranath Tagore and Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay, as well as the Persian poets Hafez, Omar Khayyam, and Rumi.[35][36] He learned Persian poetry from the regiment's Punjabi Moulvi, practiced music, and pursued his literary interests. His first prose work, "Life of a Vagabond" ('Baunduler Atmakahini'), was published in May 1919. His poem "Mukti" ("মুক্তি", 'Freedom') was published by the Bengali Muslim Literary Journal (Bangiya Mussalman Sahitya Samiti) in July 1919.[1]

Career

Bidrohi (The Rebel)

I am the unutterable grief,
I am the trembling first touch of the virgin,
I am the throbbing tenderness of her first stolen kiss.
I am the fleeting glance of the veiled beloved,
I am her constant surreptitious gaze...

I am the burning volcano in the bosom of the earth,
I am the wildfire of the woods,
I am Hell's mad terrific sea of wrath!
I ride on the wings of lightning with joy and profundity,
I scatter misery and fear all around,
I bring earthquakes on this world! "(8th stanza)"

I am the rebel eternal,
I raise my head beyond this world,
High, ever erect and alone!

 – Translation by Kabir Choudhary[37]

 
Nazrul teaching music to his disciples

Kazi Nazrul Islam joined the army in late 1917. Nazrul left the British Indian army in 1920 when the 49th Bengal Regiment was disbanded.[38] and settled in Calcutta. He joined the staff of the Bangiya Mussalman Sahitya Samiti ("Bengali Muslim Literary Society").[39] He published his first novel Bandhan-hara (বাঁধন-হারা, 'Freedom from Bondage') in 1920, on which he continued to work over the next seven years.[1] His first collection of poems, which included "Bodhan", "Shat-il-Arab", "Kheya-parer Tarani", and "Badal Prater Sharab", received critical acclaim.[1]

Nazrul grew close to other young Muslim writers, while working at the Bengali Muslim Literary Society, including Mohammad Mozammel Haq, Kazi Abdul Wadud, and Muhammad Shahidullah. Nazrul and Muhammad Shahidullah remained close throughout their lives. He was a regular at the social clubs for Calcutta's writers, poets, and intellectuals such as the Gajendar Adda and the Bharatiya Adda. Nazrul did not have the formal education of Rabindranath and as a result his poems did not follow the literary practices established by Rabindranath. Due to this he faced criticism from followers of Rabindranath.[40] Despite their differences, Nazrul looked to Rabindranath Tagore as a mentor.[1] In 1921, Nazrul was engaged to Nargis, the niece of a well-known Muslim publisher, Ali Akbar Khan, in Daulatpur, Comilla.[41] On 18 June 1921, the day of the wedding, upon public insistence by Khan that the term "Nazrul must reside in Daulatpur after marriage" be included in the marriage contract, Nazrul walked away from the wedding ceremony.[42]

 
Young Nazrul in-front of Dalmadal Cannon in Bishnupur, Bankura, 1920s

Nazrul reached the peak of his fame in 1922 with Bidrohi (The Rebel), which remains his most famous work, winning the admiration of India's literary society for his description of a rebel.[citation needed] Published in the Bijli (বিজলী, "Lightning") magazine, the rebellious language and theme were well received, coinciding with the Non-Cooperation Movement – the first mass nationalist campaign of civil disobedience against British rule.[1] Nazrul explores the different forces at work in a rebel, the destroyer, and the preserver who is able to express rage as well as beauty and sensitivity. He followed up by writing Pralayollas ('Destructive Euphoria'), and his first anthology of poems, the Agni-veena ("অগ্নি-বীণা", 'Lyre of Fire') in 1922, which enjoyed commercial and critical success. He also published a volume of short stories, the Byathar Dan "ব্যথার দান" ('Gift of Sorrow'),[43] and Yugbani ("যুগবাণী"), an anthology of essays.[44][45]

Nazrul started a bi-weekly magazine, Dhumketu ("ধূমকেতু", 'Comet') on 12 August 1922 that was critical of the British Empire. Earning the moniker of the "rebel poet", Nazrul aroused the suspicion of British Raj authorities.[27][46] The Police raided the office of Dhumketu after it published "Anondomoyeer Agomone" ("আনন্দময়ীর আগমনে"), a political poem, in September 1922. Nazrul was arrested on 23 January 1923 and charged with sedition.[46] He presented a long argument in the court, an excerpt of what he said:

I have been accused of sedition... To plead for me, the king of all kings, the judge of all judges, the eternal truth the living God... I am a poet; I have been sent by God to express the unexpressed, to portray the unportrayed. It is God who is heard through the voice of the poet... I am an instrument of God. The instrument is not unbreakable, but who is there to break God?[47]

 
Nazrul in the role of Narada, in the stage drama Dhruba.

On 14 April 1923, he was moved from Alipore Jail to Hooghly Jail in Hooghly. He began a 40-day fast to protest mistreatment by the British jail superintendent, breaking his fast more than a month later and eventually being released from prison in December 1923. Nazrul composed numerous poems and songs during his period of imprisonment. In the 1920s, the British Indian government banned many of his writings.[1] Rabindranath Tagore dedicated his play "Basanta" to Nazrul in 1923. Nazrul wrote the poem "Aj Srishti Shukher Ullashe" to thank Tagore.[48] His book Bisher Banshi ('The Flute of Poison'), published in August 1924,[49] was banned by the British Raj.[50] Bisher Banshi called for rebellion in India against the British Raj.[51] Bisher Banshi was read and distributed in secret following the ban.[52]

 
Plaque in memory of Nazrul Islam in Hooghly Jail

Nazrul was a critic of the Khilafat Movement in British India which he condemned as "hollow religious fundamentalism".[1] His rebellious expression extended to rigid orthodoxy in the name of religion and politics.[53] He also criticised the Indian National Congress for not embracing outright political independence from the British Empire. Nazrul became active in encouraging people to agitate against British rule, and joined the Bengal state unit of the Indian National Congress.[1] Along with Muzaffar Ahmed, Nazrul also helped organise the Sramik Praja Swaraj Dal (Workers and Peasants Party), a socialist political party committed to national independence and the service of the working class. On 16 December 1925, Nazrul began publishing the Langal ('Plough'), a weekly, and served as its chief editor.[1]

During his visit to Comilla in 1921, Nazrul met a young Bengali Hindu woman, Pramila Devi, with whom he fell in love, and they married on 25 April 1924. Brahmo Samaj criticised Pramila, a member of the Brahmo Samaj, for marrying a Muslim. Muslim religious leaders criticized Nazrul for his marriage to a Hindu woman. He also was criticised for his writings. Despite controversy, Nazrul's popularity and reputation as the "rebel poet" increased significantly.[1][54]

With his wife and young son Bulbul, Nazrul settled at Grace Cottage, Krishnanagar in Krishnanagar in 1926. His work began to transform as he wrote poetry and songs that articulated the aspirations of the working class, a sphere of his work known as "mass music".[55]

Daridro (Poverty)

O poverty, thou hast made me great
Thou hast made me honoured like Christ
With his crown of thorns. Thou hast given me
Courage to reveal all. To thee I owe
My insolent, naked eyes and sharp tongue.
Thy curse has turned my violin to a sword...
O proud saint, thy terrible fire
Has rendered my heaven barren.
O my child, my darling one
I could not give thee even a drop of milk
No right have I to rejoice.
Poverty weeps within my doors forever
As my spouse and my child.
Who will play the flute?

 – Translated by Kabir Chowdhury[56]

In what his contemporaries regarded as one of his greatest flairs of creativity, Nazrul vastly contributed in profusely enriching ghazals in Bengali, transforming a form of poetry written mainly in Persian and Urdu.[30] Nazrul's recording of Islamic songs was a commercial success and created interest in gramophone companies about publishing his works. A significant impact of Nazrul's work in Bengal was that it made Bengali Muslims more comfortable with the Bengali arts, which used to be dominated by Bengali Hindus.[57] His Islamic songs are popular during Ramadan in Bangladesh. He also wrote devotional songs on the Hindu Goddess Kali.[58] Nazrul also composed a number of notable Shyamasangeet, Bhajan and Kirtan, combining Hindu devotional music.[59] In 1928, Nazrul began working as a lyricist, composer, and music director for His Master's Voice Gramophone Company.[60] The songs written and music composed by him were broadcast on radio stations across India, including on the Indian Broadcasting Company.[1][61]

Naari (Woman)

I don't see any difference
Between a man and woman
Whatever great or benevolent achievements
That are in this world
Half of that was by woman,
The other half by man.

 – Translation by Sajed Kamal[62]

Nazrul believed in the equality of women, a view his contemporaries considered revolutionary, as expressed in his poem Naari (women).[63] Nazrul's poems strongly emphasised the confluence of the roles of both sexes and their equal importance to life. His poem "Barangana" (Prostitute) stunned society with its depiction of prostitutes who he addresses in the poem as "mother".[64][65] In the poem, Nazrul accepts the prostitute as a human being first, reasoning that this person was breastfed by a noble woman and belonged to the race of "mothers and sisters"; he criticises society's negative views on prostitutes.[66]

An advocate of women rights, Nazrul portrayed both traditional and nontraditional women in his work.[64] He talked about the working poor through his works such as the poem: 'Poverty' (Daridro).[37][67]

Nazrul wrote thousands of songs, known collectively as Nazrul Geeti. The exact number is uncertain. The complete text of 2,260 is known, and the first lines of 2,872 have been collected, but according to musicologist Karunamaya Goswami, it is popularly believed that the total is much higher. Goswami has written that some contemporaries put the number near 4,000.[68]

Religious beliefs

Nazrul was born a Orthodox Sunni Muslim, but engaged in religious syncretism so often such that he was seen by laymen as only a proud pluralist. Nazrul wrote an editorial in Joog Bani in 1920 about religious pluralism,

Come brother Hindu! Come Musalman! Come Buddhist! Come Christian! Let us transcend all barriers, let us forsake forever all smallness, all lies, all selfishness and let us call brothers as brothers. We shall quarrel no more.

— [69]

In another article entitled Hindu Mussalman, published in Ganabani on 2 September 1922, he wrote that the religious quarrels were between priests and Imams and not between individual Muslims and Hindus. He wrote that the Prophets had become property like cattle but they should instead be treated like a light that is for all men.[70]

 

Nazrul criticized religious fanaticism, denouncing it as evil and inherently irreligious. He wrote about human equality in his writings. He also explored the philosophy of the Qur'an and Muhammad by writing about them. Nazrul has been compared to William Butler Yeats by Serajul Islam Choudhury, Bengali literary critic and professor emeritus at the University of Dhaka, for being the first Muslim poet to create imagery and symbolism of Muslim historical figures such as Qasim ibn Hasan, Ali, Umar, Kamal Pasha, and Muhammad.[47] His condemnation of extremism and mistreatment of women provoked condemnation from Muslim and Hindu fundamentalists who opposed his liberal views on religion.[72]

Nazrul's mother died in 1928, and his second son, Bulbul, died of smallpox the following year. His first son, Krishna Mohammad, had died prematurely. Pramila gave birth to two more sons – Sabyasachi in 1928 and Aniruddha in 1931 – but Nazrul remained grief-stricken and aggrieved for a long time. His works changed significantly from the rebellious exploration of society to a deeper examination of religious themes. His works in these years led Islamic devotional songs into the mainstream of Bengali folk music, exploring the Islamic practices of namaz (prayer), roza (fasting), hajj (pilgrimage), and zakat (charity). He wrote the song "O Mon Romzaner Oi Rozar Sheshe" on fasting during Ramadan.[73] This was regarded by his contemporaries as a significant achievement, as Bengali Muslims had been strongly averse to devotional music.[74]

Nazrul was not limited to Islamic devotional music but also wrote Hindu devotional music. He composed Agamanis, Bhajans, Shyama sangeet, and kirtan.[75][76] Nazrul wrote over 500 Hindu devotional songs.[77] However, a section of Muslims criticized for writing Shyama Sangeet and declared him Kafir (infidel). On the other hand, he became displeased with some Hindus for writing devotional songs about Hindu goddesses because he was a muslim.[78] Nazrul's poetry and songs explored the philosophy of Islam and Hinduism.[70][79] Nazrul's poetry imbibed the passion and creativity of Shakti, which is identified as the Brahman, the personification of primordial energy. He also composed many songs of invocation to Lord Shiva and the goddesses Lakshmi and Saraswati and on the love of Radha and Krishna.[30] Nazrul was an exponent of humanism.[80] Although a Muslim, he named his sons with both Hindu and Muslim names: Krishna Mohammad, Arindam Khaled (Bulbul), Kazi Sabyasachi and Kazi Aniruddha.[81]

Later life

In 1930, his book Pralayshikha was banned and he faced charges of sedition by the British Indian colonial government. He was sent to jail and released in 1931, after the Gandhi–Irwin Pact was signed.[50] In 1933, Nazrul published a collection of essays titled "Modern World Literature", in which he analyses different styles and themes of literature. Between 1928 and 1935, he published 10 volumes containing 800 songs, of which more than 600 were based on classical ragas. Almost 100 were folk tunes after kirtans, and some 30 were patriotic songs. From the time of his return to Kolkata until he fell ill in 1941, Nazrul composed more than 2,600 songs, many of which have been lost.[30] His songs based on baul, jhumur, Santhali folksongs, jhanpan, or the folk songs of snake charmers, bhatiali, and bhaoaia consist of tunes of folk-songs on the one hand and a refined lyric with poetic beauty on the other. Nazrul also wrote and published poems for children.[30]

Nazrul's success soon brought him into Indian theatre and the then-nascent film industry.[1] His first film as a director was Dhruva Bhakta, which made him the first Muslim director of a Bengali film.[50] The film Vidyapati (Master of Knowledge) was produced based on his recorded play in 1936, and Nazrul served as the music director for the film adaptation of Tagore's novel Gora. Nazrul wrote songs and directed music for Sachin Sengupta's biographical epic play based on the life of Siraj-ud-Daula.[82] He worked on the plays "Jahangir" and "Annyapurna" by Monilal Gangopadhyay.[82] In 1939 Nazrul began working for Calcutta Radio, supervising the production and broadcasting of the station's musical programs. He produced critical and analytic documentaries on music, such as "Haramoni" and "Navaraga-malika". Nazrul also wrote a large variety of songs inspired by the raga Bhairav.[83]

Illness and death

 
As per a wish expressed in the Nazrul Geeti "Mashjideri Pashe Amar Kobor Dio Bhai" (Bury me next to the mosque, brother), Nazrul is buried beside the Central Mosque of The Dhaka University[84]

Nazrul's wife Pramila fell seriously ill in 1939 and was paralysed from the waist down. To provide for his wife's medical treatment, he mortgaged the royalties of his gramophone records and literary works for 400 rupees.[85] He returned to journalism in 1940 by working as chief editor for the daily newspaper Nabajug ('New Age'), founded by the Bengali politician A. K. Fazlul Huq.[85]

On hearing about the death of Rabindranath Tagore on 8 August 1941, a shocked Nazrul composed two poems in Tagore's memory. One of the two poems, "Rabihara" (loss of Rabi, or without Rabi), was broadcast on the All India Radio.[86] Within months, Nazrul himself fell ill and gradually began losing his power of speech. His behaviour became erratic, he started spending recklessly and fell into financial difficulties. In spite of her own illness, his wife constantly cared for her husband. However, Nazrul's health had seriously deteriorated and he grew increasingly depressed. He received treatment under homeopathy as well as Ayurveda, but little progress was achieved before mental dysfunction intensified and he was admitted to a mental asylum in 1942. Spending four months there without making progress, Nazrul and his family began living a quiet life in India. In 1952, he was transferred to a psychiatric hospital in Ranchi. Through the efforts of a large group of admirers who called themselves the "Nazrul Treatment Society",[87] Nazrul and Pramila were sent to London, then to Vienna for treatment.[88] The examining doctors said he had received poor care, and Dr. Hans Hoff, a leading neurosurgeon in Vienna, diagnosed that Nazrul was suffering from Pick's disease. His condition was judged to be incurable, Nazrul returned to Calcutta on 15 December 1953.[88] On 30 June 1962 Pramila died,[50] and Nazrul remained in intensive medical care. He stopped working due to his deteriorating health.[89]

On 24 May 1972, the newly independent nation of Bangladesh brought Nazrul to live in Dhaka with the consent of the Government of India. In January 1976, he was accorded the citizenship of Bangladesh.[1] Despite receiving treatment and attention, Nazrul's physical and mental health did not improve. In 1974. his youngest son, Kazi Aniruddha, a guitarist, died,[90] and Nazrul soon succumbed to his long-standing ailments on 29 August 1976. In accordance with a wish he had expressed in one of his poems, he was buried beside a mosque on the campus of the University of Dhaka. Tens of thousands of people attended his funeral; Bangladesh observed two days of national mourning, and the Parliament of India observed a minute of silence in his honour.[91]

Criticism

According to literary critic Serajul Islam Choudhury, Nazrul's poetry is characterised by abundant use of rhetorical devices, which he employed to convey conviction and sensuousness. He often wrote without care for organisation or polish. His works have often been criticized for egotism, but his admirers counter that they carry more a sense of self-confidence than of ego. They cite his ability to defy God, or rather orthodox conceptions of God, yet maintain an inner, humble devotion to Him.[47] Nazrul's poetry is regarded as rugged but unique in comparison to Tagore's sophisticated style. Nazrul's use of Persian vocabulary was controversial, but it increased the range of his work.[47]

Legacy

 
Nazrul Academy in Churulia, Asansol, West Bengal, India which is also the birthplace of Kazi Nazrul Islam.
 
Kazi Nazrul Islam on stamp of Pakistan
 
Kazi Nazrul Islam on stamp of India

The government of Bangladesh conferred upon him the status of "national poet" in 1972.[92][93] He was awarded an Honorary D.Litt. by the University of Dhaka in 1974 and in 1976 he was awarded the Ekushey Padak by the President of Bangladesh Justice Abu Sadat Muhammad Sayem.[38][50] Many centres of learning and culture in Bangladesh and India had been founded and dedicated to his memory. The Bangladesh Nazrul Sena is a large public organization working for the education of children throughout the country.[94] The Nazrul Endowment provides funding for research into the life and work of Kazi Nazrul Islam in U.S. Universities like California State University, Northridge and Connecticut State University.[95][96] Nazrul was awarded the Jagattarini Gold Medal in 1945 – the highest honour for work in Bengali literature by the University of Calcutta – and awarded the Padma Bhushan, the third-highest civilian award of India, in 1960.[88]

 
Nazrul Square in DC Hill Park in Chittagong City.

Nazrul's works for children have won acclaim for his use of rich language, imagination, enthusiasm, and an ability to fascinate young readers.[47] Nazrul is regarded for his secularism.[97] His poetry has been translated to languages English, Spanish, and Portuguese.[98] A major avenue is named after him in Dhaka, Bangladesh.[99] Kazi Nazrul University in Asansol, West Bengal, India is named after him and Kabi Nazrul College In Birbhum, West Bengal.[100] Jatiya Kabi Kazi Nazrul Islam University in Mymensingh, Bangladesh is a public university named after him.[101] Kabi Nazrul Government College in Dhaka, Bangladesh is also named after him. There is a cultural institution called Nazrul Academy, which is spread throughout Bangladesh. Kazi Nazrul Islam Airport in Andal, West Bengal, is India's first private greenfield airport.[11] A chair has been named after him in University of Calcutta and the Government of West Bengal has opened a Nazrul Tirtha in Rajarhat, a cultural centre with library, auditorium and movie theatre dedicated to his memory.[11][102] On May 25, 2020, Google celebrated his 121st birthday with a Google Doodle.[103] On 20 November, 2020, a documentary film about Kazi Nazrul Islam was released in Dhaka titled Biography of Nazrul.

See also

References

Notes

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Islam, Rafiqul (2012). "Kazi Nazrul Islam". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh. ISBN 978-984-32-0576-6. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  2. ^ a b c Chakravarty, Basudha (1968). Kazi Nazrul Islam. National Biography Series. New Delhi: National Book Trust, India. p. 1. OCLC 837539518. Kazi Nazrul Islam was born on Jaistha 11 of the Bengali year 1306, corresponding to May 24, 1899 at village Churulia in Burdwan district of what is now West Bengal.
  3. ^ Talukdar, Rezaul Karim (1994). Nazrul, the gift of the century. Dhaka: Manan. p. 121. ISBN 978-9848156001. In 1976 Nazrul was awarded the citizenship of Bangladesh.
  4. ^ Banerjee, Prathama (4 January 2021). Elementary Aspects of the Political: Histories from the Global South. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-1-4780-1244-3.
  5. ^ Bairathi, Shashi (1987). Communism and Nationalism in India: A Study in Inter-relationship, 1919-1947. Anamika Prakashan. ISBN 978-81-85150-00-0.
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External links

  • Works by or about Kazi Nazrul Islam at Internet Archive
  • Works by Nazrul Islam (Kazi) at Google Books
  • Kazi Nazrul Islam
  • Kazi Nazrul Islam Poem

kazi, nazrul, islam, nazrul, nazrul, islam, redirect, here, other, persons, with, same, name, nazrul, islam, disambiguation, other, uses, disambiguation, bengali, নজর, ইসল, pronounced, kaːd, ʒrul, ɪslam, listen, 1899, august, 1976, bengali, poet, writer, music. Nazrul and Nazrul Islam redirect here For other persons with the same name see Nazrul Islam disambiguation For other uses of Kazi Nazrul Islam see Kazi Nazrul Islam disambiguation Kazi Nazrul Islam Bengali ক জ নজর ল ইসল ম pronounced kaːd ʒi nod ʒrul ɪslam listen 24 May 1899 29 August 1976 was a Bengali poet writer musician and is the national poet of Bangladesh 7 Nazrul is regarded as one of the greatest poets in Bengali literature Popularly known as Nazrul he produced a large body of poetry music messages novels stories etc with themes that included equality justice anti imperialism humanity rebellion against oppression and religious devotion 8 Nazrul s activism for political and social justice as well as writing a poem titled as Bidrohi meaning the rebel in Bengali earned him the title of Bidrohi Kobi Rebel Poet 9 His compositions form the avant garde music genre of Nazrul Giti Music of Nazrul 10 11 12 13 Bidrohi Kobi Rebel Poet Kazi Nazrul Islamক জ নজর ল ইসল মNazrul in Chittagong 1926Personal detailsBorn11 Joiṣṭhyo 1306 Bonggabdo 1899 05 26 26 May 1899 1 2 Churulia Asansol Bengal Presidency British India present day Paschim Bardhaman district West Bengal India 2 Died29 August 1976 1976 08 29 aged 77 Dhaka BangladeshResting placeMausoleum of Kazi Nazrul IslamCitizenshipBritish Indian 1899 14 August 1947 Indian 15 August 1947 29 August 1976 Bangladeshi 18 February 1976 29 August 1976 3 Political partyWorkers and Peasants Party 4 5 6 SpousesNargis Asar Khanum m 1921 div 1937 wbr Pramila Devi m 1924 died 1962 wbr ChildrenKrishna MuhammadArindam KhaledSabyasachiAniruddhaOccupationPoet short story writer song composer playwright singer flautist novelist essayist literary translator soldier film actor political activistAwardsPadma Bhushan 1960 Ekushey Padak 1976 Independence Day Award 1977 SignatureNickname s Bengali দ খ ম ঞ ত র ক ষ য প romanized Dukhumian TarakkhyapaMilitary careerAllegiance British EmpireService wbr branch British Indian ArmyYears of service1917 1920RankHavildar Sergeant Unit49th Bengal RegimentBattles warsFirst World WarBorn into a Bengali Muslim Kazi family hailing from Burdwan district in Bengal Presidency now in West Bengal India 2 Nazrul Islam received religious education and as a young man worked as a muezzin at a local mosque He learned about poetry drama and literature while working with the rural theatrical group Leṭor Dol Leṭo being a folk song genre of West Bengal 14 usually performed by the people from Muslim community of the region He joined the British Indian Army in 1917 and was posted in Karachi Nazrul established himself as a journalist in Calcutta after the war ended He criticised the British Raj and called for revolution through his famous poetic works such as Bidrohi ব দ র হ The Rebel and Bhangar Gan ভ ঙ গ র গ ন The Song of Destruction 15 as well as in his publication Dhumketu The Comet His nationalist activism in Indian independence movement led to his frequent imprisonment by the colonial British authorities While in prison Nazrul wrote the Rajbondir Jobanbondi র জবন দ র জব নবন দ Deposition of a Political Prisoner 16 His writings greatly inspired Bengalis of East Pakistan during the Bangladesh Liberation War Nazrul s writings explored themes such as freedom humanity love and revolution He opposed all forms of bigotry and fundamentalism including religious caste based and gender based 17 Nazrul wrote short stories novels and essays but is best known for his songs and poems He introduced the ghazal songs in Bengali language 18 19 20 21 and is also known for his extensive use of Arabic Persian and Urdu words in his works 22 23 24 Nazrul wrote and composed music for nearly 4 000 songs many recorded on HMV and gramophone records 25 collectively known as Nazrul Giti In 1942 at the age of 43 he began to suffer from an unknown disease losing his voice and memory A medical team in Vienna diagnosed the disease as Pick s disease 26 a rare incurable neurodegenerative disease It caused Nazrul s health to decline steadily and forced him to live in isolation He was also admitted in Ranchi Jharkhand psychiatric hospital for many years At the invitation of the Government of Bangladesh Nazrul s family took him to Bangladesh and moved to Dhaka in 1972 He died four years later on 29 August 1976 20 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Religious beliefs 4 Later life 5 Illness and death 6 Criticism 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 10 External linksEarly life EditNazrul was born on Wednesday 24 May 1899 27 28 in the village of Churulia Asansol Sadar Paschim Bardhaman district of the Bengal Presidency now in West Bengal India He was born into a Bengali Muslim Kazi family and was the second of three sons and a daughter Nazrul s father Kazi Faqeer Ahmed was the imam and caretaker of the local Pirpukur mosque and mausoleum of Haji Pahlawan 29 Nazrul s mother was Zahida Khatun Nazrul had two brothers Kazi Saahibjaan and Kazi Ali Hussain and a sister Umme Kulsum He was nicknamed Dukhu Mian দ খ ম ঞ literally the one with grief or Mr Sad Man Nazrul studied at a maktab and madrasa run by a mosque and a dargah respectively where he studied the Quran Hadith Islamic philosophy and theology His father died in 1908 and at the age of ten Nazrul took his father s place as a caretaker of the mosque to support his family He also assisted teachers in the school He later worked as the muezzin at the mosque 1 30 Attracted to folk theatre Nazrul joined a leto travelling theatrical group run by his uncle Fazle Karim He worked and travelled with them learning to act as well as writing songs and poems for the plays and musicals 27 Through his work and experiences Nazrul began studying Bengali and Sanskrit literature as well as Hindu scriptures such as the Puranas Nazrul composed folk plays for the group which included Chashar Shōng the drama of a peasant and plays about characters from the Mahabharata including Shokunibōdh the Killing of Shakuni Raja Judhisthirer Shōng the drama of King Yudhishthira Data Kōrno the philanthropic Karna Akbōr Badshah Akbar the emperor Kobi Kalidas poet Kalidas Bidyan Hutum the learned owl and Rajputrer Shōng the prince s sorrow 1 In 1910 Nazrul left the troupe and enrolled at the Searsole Raj High School in Raniganj In school he was influenced by his teacher a Jugantar activist Nibaran Chandra Ghatak and began a lifelong friendship with fellow author Sailajananda Mukhopadhyay who was his classmate He later transferred to the Mathrun High English School studying under the headmaster and poet Kumud Ranjan Mullick Unable to continue paying his school fees Nazrul left the school and joined a group of kaviyals Later he took jobs as a cook at Wahid s a well known bakery of the region and at a tea stall in the town of Asansol In 1914 Nazrul studied in the Darirampur School now Jatiya Kabi Kazi Nazrul Islam University in Trishal Mymensingh District Amongst other subjects Nazrul studied Bengali Sanskrit Arabic Persian literature and Hindustani classical music under teachers who were impressed by his dedication and skill 1 31 32 Nazrul studied up to grade 10 but did not appear for the matriculation pre test examination instead in 1917 he joined the British Indian Army at the age of eighteen He had two primary motivations for joining the British Indian Army first a youthful desire for adventure and second an interest in the politics of the time 33 Attached to the 49th Bengal Regiment he was posted to the Karachi Cantonment where he wrote his first prose and poetry Although he never saw active fighting he rose in rank from corporal to havildar sergeant and served as quartermaster for his battalion 34 During this period Nazrul read extensively the works of Rabindranath Tagore and Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay as well as the Persian poets Hafez Omar Khayyam and Rumi 35 36 He learned Persian poetry from the regiment s Punjabi Moulvi practiced music and pursued his literary interests His first prose work Life of a Vagabond Baunduler Atmakahini was published in May 1919 His poem Mukti ম ক ত Freedom was published by the Bengali Muslim Literary Journal Bangiya Mussalman Sahitya Samiti in July 1919 1 Career EditBidrohi The Rebel I am the unutterable grief I am the trembling first touch of the virgin I am the throbbing tenderness of her first stolen kiss I am the fleeting glance of the veiled beloved I am her constant surreptitious gaze I am the burning volcano in the bosom of the earth I am the wildfire of the woods I am Hell s mad terrific sea of wrath I ride on the wings of lightning with joy and profundity I scatter misery and fear all around I bring earthquakes on this world 8th stanza I am the rebel eternal I raise my head beyond this world High ever erect and alone Translation by Kabir Choudhary 37 Nazrul teaching music to his disciples Kazi Nazrul Islam joined the army in late 1917 Nazrul left the British Indian army in 1920 when the 49th Bengal Regiment was disbanded 38 and settled in Calcutta He joined the staff of the Bangiya Mussalman Sahitya Samiti Bengali Muslim Literary Society 39 He published his first novel Bandhan hara ব ধন হ র Freedom from Bondage in 1920 on which he continued to work over the next seven years 1 His first collection of poems which included Bodhan Shat il Arab Kheya parer Tarani and Badal Prater Sharab received critical acclaim 1 Nazrul grew close to other young Muslim writers while working at the Bengali Muslim Literary Society including Mohammad Mozammel Haq Kazi Abdul Wadud and Muhammad Shahidullah Nazrul and Muhammad Shahidullah remained close throughout their lives He was a regular at the social clubs for Calcutta s writers poets and intellectuals such as the Gajendar Adda and the Bharatiya Adda Nazrul did not have the formal education of Rabindranath and as a result his poems did not follow the literary practices established by Rabindranath Due to this he faced criticism from followers of Rabindranath 40 Despite their differences Nazrul looked to Rabindranath Tagore as a mentor 1 In 1921 Nazrul was engaged to Nargis the niece of a well known Muslim publisher Ali Akbar Khan in Daulatpur Comilla 41 On 18 June 1921 the day of the wedding upon public insistence by Khan that the term Nazrul must reside in Daulatpur after marriage be included in the marriage contract Nazrul walked away from the wedding ceremony 42 Young Nazrul in front of Dalmadal Cannon in Bishnupur Bankura 1920s Nazrul reached the peak of his fame in 1922 with Bidrohi The Rebel which remains his most famous work winning the admiration of India s literary society for his description of a rebel citation needed Published in the Bijli ব জল Lightning magazine the rebellious language and theme were well received coinciding with the Non Cooperation Movement the first mass nationalist campaign of civil disobedience against British rule 1 Nazrul explores the different forces at work in a rebel the destroyer and the preserver who is able to express rage as well as beauty and sensitivity He followed up by writing Pralayollas Destructive Euphoria and his first anthology of poems the Agni veena অগ ন ব ণ Lyre of Fire in 1922 which enjoyed commercial and critical success He also published a volume of short stories the Byathar Dan ব যথ র দ ন Gift of Sorrow 43 and Yugbani য গব ণ an anthology of essays 44 45 Nazrul started a bi weekly magazine Dhumketu ধ মক ত Comet on 12 August 1922 that was critical of the British Empire Earning the moniker of the rebel poet Nazrul aroused the suspicion of British Raj authorities 27 46 The Police raided the office of Dhumketu after it published Anondomoyeer Agomone আনন দময র আগমন a political poem in September 1922 Nazrul was arrested on 23 January 1923 and charged with sedition 46 He presented a long argument in the court an excerpt of what he said I have been accused of sedition To plead for me the king of all kings the judge of all judges the eternal truth the living God I am a poet I have been sent by God to express the unexpressed to portray the unportrayed It is God who is heard through the voice of the poet I am an instrument of God The instrument is not unbreakable but who is there to break God 47 Nazrul in the role of Narada in the stage drama Dhruba On 14 April 1923 he was moved from Alipore Jail to Hooghly Jail in Hooghly He began a 40 day fast to protest mistreatment by the British jail superintendent breaking his fast more than a month later and eventually being released from prison in December 1923 Nazrul composed numerous poems and songs during his period of imprisonment In the 1920s the British Indian government banned many of his writings 1 Rabindranath Tagore dedicated his play Basanta to Nazrul in 1923 Nazrul wrote the poem Aj Srishti Shukher Ullashe to thank Tagore 48 His book Bisher Banshi The Flute of Poison published in August 1924 49 was banned by the British Raj 50 Bisher Banshi called for rebellion in India against the British Raj 51 Bisher Banshi was read and distributed in secret following the ban 52 Plaque in memory of Nazrul Islam in Hooghly Jail Nazrul was a critic of the Khilafat Movement in British India which he condemned as hollow religious fundamentalism 1 His rebellious expression extended to rigid orthodoxy in the name of religion and politics 53 He also criticised the Indian National Congress for not embracing outright political independence from the British Empire Nazrul became active in encouraging people to agitate against British rule and joined the Bengal state unit of the Indian National Congress 1 Along with Muzaffar Ahmed Nazrul also helped organise the Sramik Praja Swaraj Dal Workers and Peasants Party a socialist political party committed to national independence and the service of the working class On 16 December 1925 Nazrul began publishing the Langal Plough a weekly and served as its chief editor 1 During his visit to Comilla in 1921 Nazrul met a young Bengali Hindu woman Pramila Devi with whom he fell in love and they married on 25 April 1924 Brahmo Samaj criticised Pramila a member of the Brahmo Samaj for marrying a Muslim Muslim religious leaders criticized Nazrul for his marriage to a Hindu woman He also was criticised for his writings Despite controversy Nazrul s popularity and reputation as the rebel poet increased significantly 1 54 With his wife and young son Bulbul Nazrul settled at Grace Cottage Krishnanagar in Krishnanagar in 1926 His work began to transform as he wrote poetry and songs that articulated the aspirations of the working class a sphere of his work known as mass music 55 Daridro Poverty O poverty thou hast made me great Thou hast made me honoured like Christ With his crown of thorns Thou hast given me Courage to reveal all To thee I owe My insolent naked eyes and sharp tongue Thy curse has turned my violin to a sword O proud saint thy terrible fire Has rendered my heaven barren O my child my darling one I could not give thee even a drop of milk No right have I to rejoice Poverty weeps within my doors forever As my spouse and my child Who will play the flute Translated by Kabir Chowdhury 56 In what his contemporaries regarded as one of his greatest flairs of creativity Nazrul vastly contributed in profusely enriching ghazals in Bengali transforming a form of poetry written mainly in Persian and Urdu 30 Nazrul s recording of Islamic songs was a commercial success and created interest in gramophone companies about publishing his works A significant impact of Nazrul s work in Bengal was that it made Bengali Muslims more comfortable with the Bengali arts which used to be dominated by Bengali Hindus 57 His Islamic songs are popular during Ramadan in Bangladesh He also wrote devotional songs on the Hindu Goddess Kali 58 Nazrul also composed a number of notable Shyamasangeet Bhajan and Kirtan combining Hindu devotional music 59 In 1928 Nazrul began working as a lyricist composer and music director for His Master s Voice Gramophone Company 60 The songs written and music composed by him were broadcast on radio stations across India including on the Indian Broadcasting Company 1 61 Naari Woman I don t see any difference Between a man and woman Whatever great or benevolent achievements That are in this world Half of that was by woman The other half by man Translation by Sajed Kamal 62 Nazrul believed in the equality of women a view his contemporaries considered revolutionary as expressed in his poem Naari women 63 Nazrul s poems strongly emphasised the confluence of the roles of both sexes and their equal importance to life His poem Barangana Prostitute stunned society with its depiction of prostitutes who he addresses in the poem as mother 64 65 In the poem Nazrul accepts the prostitute as a human being first reasoning that this person was breastfed by a noble woman and belonged to the race of mothers and sisters he criticises society s negative views on prostitutes 66 An advocate of women rights Nazrul portrayed both traditional and nontraditional women in his work 64 He talked about the working poor through his works such as the poem Poverty Daridro 37 67 Nazrul wrote thousands of songs known collectively as Nazrul Geeti The exact number is uncertain The complete text of 2 260 is known and the first lines of 2 872 have been collected but according to musicologist Karunamaya Goswami it is popularly believed that the total is much higher Goswami has written that some contemporaries put the number near 4 000 68 Religious beliefs EditNazrul was born a Orthodox Sunni Muslim but engaged in religious syncretism so often such that he was seen by laymen as only a proud pluralist Nazrul wrote an editorial in Joog Bani in 1920 about religious pluralism Come brother Hindu Come Musalman Come Buddhist Come Christian Let us transcend all barriers let us forsake forever all smallness all lies all selfishness and let us call brothers as brothers We shall quarrel no more 69 In another article entitled Hindu Mussalman published in Ganabani on 2 September 1922 he wrote that the religious quarrels were between priests and Imams and not between individual Muslims and Hindus He wrote that the Prophets had become property like cattle but they should instead be treated like a light that is for all men 70 Nazrul in Sitakunda Chittagong District in 1929 71 Nazrul criticized religious fanaticism denouncing it as evil and inherently irreligious He wrote about human equality in his writings He also explored the philosophy of the Qur an and Muhammad by writing about them Nazrul has been compared to William Butler Yeats by Serajul Islam Choudhury Bengali literary critic and professor emeritus at the University of Dhaka for being the first Muslim poet to create imagery and symbolism of Muslim historical figures such as Qasim ibn Hasan Ali Umar Kamal Pasha and Muhammad 47 His condemnation of extremism and mistreatment of women provoked condemnation from Muslim and Hindu fundamentalists who opposed his liberal views on religion 72 Nazrul s mother died in 1928 and his second son Bulbul died of smallpox the following year His first son Krishna Mohammad had died prematurely Pramila gave birth to two more sons Sabyasachi in 1928 and Aniruddha in 1931 but Nazrul remained grief stricken and aggrieved for a long time His works changed significantly from the rebellious exploration of society to a deeper examination of religious themes His works in these years led Islamic devotional songs into the mainstream of Bengali folk music exploring the Islamic practices of namaz prayer roza fasting hajj pilgrimage and zakat charity He wrote the song O Mon Romzaner Oi Rozar Sheshe on fasting during Ramadan 73 This was regarded by his contemporaries as a significant achievement as Bengali Muslims had been strongly averse to devotional music 74 Nazrul was not limited to Islamic devotional music but also wrote Hindu devotional music He composed Agamanis Bhajans Shyama sangeet and kirtan 75 76 Nazrul wrote over 500 Hindu devotional songs 77 However a section of Muslims criticized for writing Shyama Sangeet and declared him Kafir infidel On the other hand he became displeased with some Hindus for writing devotional songs about Hindu goddesses because he was a muslim 78 Nazrul s poetry and songs explored the philosophy of Islam and Hinduism 70 79 Nazrul s poetry imbibed the passion and creativity of Shakti which is identified as the Brahman the personification of primordial energy He also composed many songs of invocation to Lord Shiva and the goddesses Lakshmi and Saraswati and on the love of Radha and Krishna 30 Nazrul was an exponent of humanism 80 Although a Muslim he named his sons with both Hindu and Muslim names Krishna Mohammad Arindam Khaled Bulbul Kazi Sabyasachi and Kazi Aniruddha 81 Later life EditIn 1930 his book Pralayshikha was banned and he faced charges of sedition by the British Indian colonial government He was sent to jail and released in 1931 after the Gandhi Irwin Pact was signed 50 In 1933 Nazrul published a collection of essays titled Modern World Literature in which he analyses different styles and themes of literature Between 1928 and 1935 he published 10 volumes containing 800 songs of which more than 600 were based on classical ragas Almost 100 were folk tunes after kirtans and some 30 were patriotic songs From the time of his return to Kolkata until he fell ill in 1941 Nazrul composed more than 2 600 songs many of which have been lost 30 His songs based on baul jhumur Santhali folksongs jhanpan or the folk songs of snake charmers bhatiali and bhaoaia consist of tunes of folk songs on the one hand and a refined lyric with poetic beauty on the other Nazrul also wrote and published poems for children 30 Nazrul s success soon brought him into Indian theatre and the then nascent film industry 1 His first film as a director was Dhruva Bhakta which made him the first Muslim director of a Bengali film 50 The film Vidyapati Master of Knowledge was produced based on his recorded play in 1936 and Nazrul served as the music director for the film adaptation of Tagore s novel Gora Nazrul wrote songs and directed music for Sachin Sengupta s biographical epic play based on the life of Siraj ud Daula 82 He worked on the plays Jahangir and Annyapurna by Monilal Gangopadhyay 82 In 1939 Nazrul began working for Calcutta Radio supervising the production and broadcasting of the station s musical programs He produced critical and analytic documentaries on music such as Haramoni and Navaraga malika Nazrul also wrote a large variety of songs inspired by the raga Bhairav 83 Illness and death Edit As per a wish expressed in the Nazrul Geeti Mashjideri Pashe Amar Kobor Dio Bhai Bury me next to the mosque brother Nazrul is buried beside the Central Mosque of The Dhaka University 84 Nazrul s wife Pramila fell seriously ill in 1939 and was paralysed from the waist down To provide for his wife s medical treatment he mortgaged the royalties of his gramophone records and literary works for 400 rupees 85 He returned to journalism in 1940 by working as chief editor for the daily newspaper Nabajug New Age founded by the Bengali politician A K Fazlul Huq 85 On hearing about the death of Rabindranath Tagore on 8 August 1941 a shocked Nazrul composed two poems in Tagore s memory One of the two poems Rabihara loss of Rabi or without Rabi was broadcast on the All India Radio 86 Within months Nazrul himself fell ill and gradually began losing his power of speech His behaviour became erratic he started spending recklessly and fell into financial difficulties In spite of her own illness his wife constantly cared for her husband However Nazrul s health had seriously deteriorated and he grew increasingly depressed He received treatment under homeopathy as well as Ayurveda but little progress was achieved before mental dysfunction intensified and he was admitted to a mental asylum in 1942 Spending four months there without making progress Nazrul and his family began living a quiet life in India In 1952 he was transferred to a psychiatric hospital in Ranchi Through the efforts of a large group of admirers who called themselves the Nazrul Treatment Society 87 Nazrul and Pramila were sent to London then to Vienna for treatment 88 The examining doctors said he had received poor care and Dr Hans Hoff a leading neurosurgeon in Vienna diagnosed that Nazrul was suffering from Pick s disease His condition was judged to be incurable Nazrul returned to Calcutta on 15 December 1953 88 On 30 June 1962 Pramila died 50 and Nazrul remained in intensive medical care He stopped working due to his deteriorating health 89 On 24 May 1972 the newly independent nation of Bangladesh brought Nazrul to live in Dhaka with the consent of the Government of India In January 1976 he was accorded the citizenship of Bangladesh 1 Despite receiving treatment and attention Nazrul s physical and mental health did not improve In 1974 his youngest son Kazi Aniruddha a guitarist died 90 and Nazrul soon succumbed to his long standing ailments on 29 August 1976 In accordance with a wish he had expressed in one of his poems he was buried beside a mosque on the campus of the University of Dhaka Tens of thousands of people attended his funeral Bangladesh observed two days of national mourning and the Parliament of India observed a minute of silence in his honour 91 Criticism EditAccording to literary critic Serajul Islam Choudhury Nazrul s poetry is characterised by abundant use of rhetorical devices which he employed to convey conviction and sensuousness He often wrote without care for organisation or polish His works have often been criticized for egotism but his admirers counter that they carry more a sense of self confidence than of ego They cite his ability to defy God or rather orthodox conceptions of God yet maintain an inner humble devotion to Him 47 Nazrul s poetry is regarded as rugged but unique in comparison to Tagore s sophisticated style Nazrul s use of Persian vocabulary was controversial but it increased the range of his work 47 Legacy EditMain article List of things named after Kazi Nazrul Islam Nazrul Academy in Churulia Asansol West Bengal India which is also the birthplace of Kazi Nazrul Islam Kazi Nazrul Islam on stamp of Pakistan Kazi Nazrul Islam on stamp of India The government of Bangladesh conferred upon him the status of national poet in 1972 92 93 He was awarded an Honorary D Litt by the University of Dhaka in 1974 and in 1976 he was awarded the Ekushey Padak by the President of Bangladesh Justice Abu Sadat Muhammad Sayem 38 50 Many centres of learning and culture in Bangladesh and India had been founded and dedicated to his memory The Bangladesh Nazrul Sena is a large public organization working for the education of children throughout the country 94 The Nazrul Endowment provides funding for research into the life and work of Kazi Nazrul Islam in U S Universities like California State University Northridge and Connecticut State University 95 96 Nazrul was awarded the Jagattarini Gold Medal in 1945 the highest honour for work in Bengali literature by the University of Calcutta and awarded the Padma Bhushan the third highest civilian award of India in 1960 88 Nazrul Square in DC Hill Park in Chittagong City Nazrul s works for children have won acclaim for his use of rich language imagination enthusiasm and an ability to fascinate young readers 47 Nazrul is regarded for his secularism 97 His poetry has been translated to languages English Spanish and Portuguese 98 A major avenue is named after him in Dhaka Bangladesh 99 Kazi Nazrul University in Asansol West Bengal India is named after him and Kabi Nazrul College In Birbhum West Bengal 100 Jatiya Kabi Kazi Nazrul Islam University in Mymensingh Bangladesh is a public university named after him 101 Kabi Nazrul Government College in Dhaka Bangladesh is also named after him There is a cultural institution called Nazrul Academy which is spread throughout Bangladesh Kazi Nazrul Islam Airport in Andal West Bengal is India s first private greenfield airport 11 A chair has been named after him in University of Calcutta and the Government of West Bengal has opened a Nazrul Tirtha in Rajarhat a cultural centre with library auditorium and movie theatre dedicated to his memory 11 102 On May 25 2020 Google celebrated his 121st birthday with a Google Doodle 103 On 20 November 2020 a documentary film about Kazi Nazrul Islam was released in Dhaka titled Biography of Nazrul See also EditList of works of Kazi Nazrul Islam Shiulimala a book of short stories written by Kazi Nazrul Islam References EditNotes Edit Citations Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Islam Rafiqul 2012 Kazi Nazrul Islam In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh ISBN 978 984 32 0576 6 Retrieved 26 March 2016 a b c Chakravarty Basudha 1968 Kazi Nazrul Islam National Biography Series New Delhi National Book Trust India p 1 OCLC 837539518 Kazi Nazrul Islam was born on Jaistha 11 of the Bengali year 1306 corresponding to May 24 1899 at village Churulia in Burdwan district of what is now West Bengal Talukdar Rezaul Karim 1994 Nazrul the gift of the century Dhaka Manan p 121 ISBN 978 9848156001 In 1976 Nazrul was awarded the citizenship of Bangladesh Banerjee Prathama 4 January 2021 Elementary Aspects of the Political Histories from the Global South Duke University Press ISBN 978 1 4780 1244 3 Bairathi Shashi 1987 Communism and Nationalism in India A Study in Inter relationship 1919 1947 Anamika Prakashan ISBN 978 81 85150 00 0 Murshid Ghulam 25 January 2018 Bengali Culture Over a Thousand Years Niyogi Books ISBN 978 93 86906 12 0 Langley Winston 2007 Kazi Nazrul Islam The Voice of Poetry and the Struggle for Human Wholeness University of Minnesota p 5 Hemal Mahmudul 28 May 2015 Nazrul s humanist vision Dhaka Courier Archived from the original on 18 April 2017 Mitra Priti K 1 May 1993 The Rebel Poet and the Mahatma Kazi Nazrul Islam s Critique of Gandhi s Politics in the 1920s South Asia Research 13 1 46 55 doi 10 1177 026272809301300103 ISSN 0262 7280 S2CID 144847702 Sheik Hasina India Bangladesh Joint Celebration 113th birth anniversary of Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam and 90th year of his poem Rebel PDF Prime Minister s Office Government of the People s Republic of Bangladesh Retrieved 26 December 2013 a b c Chakraborti Suman 26 May 2015 West Bengal government celebrates Kazi Nazrul Islam s birth anniversary The Times of India Archived from the original on 19 April 2017 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Nazrul Jayanti celebrated across Silchar The Sentinel 27 May 2018 Retrieved 28 June 2018 Menon Anoop 26 April 2017 List of public holidays in May 2017 to plan out your vacations Travel India Archived from the original on 28 June 2018 Retrieved 28 June 2018 Tripura will be celebrating Nazrul Jayanti on 26 May Bhattacharya Ashutosh 1977 Bangiya Lok Sangeet Ratnakar Vol 4 An Encyclopaedia of Bengali Folk song in Bengali Calcutta A Mukherjee amp Co Pvt Ltd p 1802 পশ চ ম ব ল র এক শ র ণ র জনপ র য ল ক সঙ গ ত ল ট গ ন ইহ ক ল ট গ ন ল ট য র গ নও বল Alam Abu Yusuf 2005 Muslims and Bengal Politics 1912 24 Raktakarabee p 256 Haldar Gopal 1973 Kazi Nazrul Islam Sahitya Akademi p 41 Kazi Ankan 14 June 2017 Diminishing A Poet The Indian Express Retrieved 28 June 2018 Hussain Azfar Rereading Kazi Nazrul Islam Video lecture YouTube Retrieved 15 July 2016 Ali Sarwat 21 September 2014 A taste of Bengal The News International The News on Sunday Archived from the original on 28 June 2018 Retrieved 28 June 2018 Firoza Begum too sang these Bengali ghazals of Nazrul Islam a b Islam Mohammad Shafiqul 25 May 2007 Nazrul An ardent lover of humanity The Daily Star Archived from the original on 4 February 2018 Retrieved 28 June 2018 He is best known for his songs in which he pioneered new forms such as Bengali ghazals Feature article 15 September 2016 Remembering the rebel poet The Hindu Retrieved 2 March 2021 Shams Ahmed Tahsin 24 May 2018 The rebel icon of Bengal Kazi Nazrul Islam The Bangladesh Post Archived from the original on 28 May 2018 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Rashid Md Mumit Al Nur Tanjina Binte 24 November 2017 Persian Words Used in Kazi Nazrul Islam s Poetry Language Art 2 4 117 128 doi 10 22046 LA 2017 23 ISSN 2538 2713 Ahmed Dr Forqan Uddin 27 August 2018 Kazi Nazrul Islam Classic and romantic The New Nation Retrieved 25 May 2020 Hossain Quazi Motahar 2000 Nazrul Islam the Singer and Writer of Songs In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 55 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Farooq Mohammad Omar Kazi Nazrul Islam Illness and Treatment nazrul org Archived from the original on 29 May 2015 Retrieved 26 March 2016 a b c Kazi Nazrul Islam A Chronology of life Nazrul Institute Ministry of Cultural Affairs Government of Bangladesh Archived from the original on 24 April 2008 Retrieved 28 April 2008 Tripura celebrates 116th birth anniversary of Kazi Nazrul Islam ANI News Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Faber Roland Slabodsky Santiago 15 March 2016 Living Traditions and Universal Conviviality Prospects and Challenges for Peace in Multireligious Communities Rowman amp Littlefield p 16 ISBN 978 1 4985 1336 4 a b c d e Chaudhuri Dilip 22 September 2006 Nazrul Islam The unparalleled lyricist and composer of Bengal Press Information Bureau Government of India Archived from the original on 5 November 2002 Retrieved 22 September 2006 Alt URL Nazrul s birth anniv today New Age 25 May 2018 Retrieved 28 June 2018 Nazrul s 119th birth anniversary today Prothom Alo 25 May 2018 Retrieved 28 June 2018 Bose Buddhadeva 2000 Modern Bengali Poetry and Nazrul Islam In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 80 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Zaman Niaz 17 December 2014 Impact on Nazrul The Daily Star Archived from the original on 17 April 2017 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Rahman Aziz 27 August 2015 Nazrul The rebel and the romantic The Daily Sun Archived from the original on 17 April 2017 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Islam Mohammad Shafiqul 25 May 2007 Nazrul An ardent lover of humanity The Daily Star Archived from the original on 4 February 2018 Retrieved 12 July 2016 a b Kabir Choudhary Rebel Archived from the original on 26 October 2007 Retrieved 8 July 2006 a b Nazrul s death anniversary today The Daily Star 27 August 2015 Retrieved 5 March 2016 Khondkar Sirajul Haque 2012 Bangiya Mussalman Sahitya Patrika in Sirajul Islam and Ahmed A Jamal ed Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Nag Sajal 2008 Story of a Rebel Poet Economic and Political Weekly Book Review 43 26 27 84 85 ISSN 0012 9976 JSTOR 40278906 Nurul Huda Muhammad 2001 Nazrul s Aesthetics and Other Aspects Bangladesh Nazrul Institute p 124 Retrieved 26 March 2016 Muzaffar Ahmad 1998 Kazi Nazrul Islam Smritikatha Kolkata India National Book Agency pp 66 67 Bose Sugata 2009 A Hundred Horizons The Indian Ocean in the Age of Global Empire Harvard University Press pp 299 ISBN 978 0 674 02157 0 Talukdar Rezaul Karim Islam Kazi Nazrul 1994 Nazrul the gift of the century Manan pp 47 48 ISBN 9789848156001 Rajesh K Guru Sarfarosh A Naadi Exposition of the Lives of Indian Revolutionaries Notion Press ISBN 9789352061730 Retrieved 26 March 2016 a b Nawaz Ali 20 January 2015 Dhumketu Banglapedia Archived from the original on 4 July 2018 Retrieved 3 July 2018 a b c d e Choudhury Serajul Islam 1 June 2006 The Blazing Comet New Age Archived from the original on 19 July 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2006 Nazrul Islam did what no other Muslim poet in modern Bengal had dared to do He created images and symbols out of the well known heroes from Muslim history Thus Tariq and Qasim Ali and Omar Hasan and Hussain and even the Prophet himself figure in his poetry as historical beings He also transformed men like Kamal Pasha and Anwar Pasha into symbols The method is somewhat similar to the one Yeats employed in his poetry Kazi Nazrul Islam The Daily Star 25 May 2015 Archived from the original on 30 May 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Bangladesh Baṃla Ekaḍemi 1995 Bangla Academy Journal Bangla Academy p 41 a b c d e Chandan Shahnawaz 30 August 2013 The Life of a Rebel The Daily Star Archived from the original on 3 December 2017 Retrieved 27 March 2016 Chaman 1977 The Voice of Nazr ul Islam Indian Literature 20 4 109 118 ISSN 0019 5804 JSTOR 24158699 Sen Manikuntala 2001 In search of freedom an unfinished journey Stree p 17 ISBN 978 81 85604 25 1 Learning by heart the poems of his Agnibina and Bisher Banshi we hid the books in our breasts and passed them secretly to friends As far as I remember Bisher Banshi was banned Rushd Abu 2000 Nazrul Islam s The Rebel In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 100 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Chowdhury Serajul Islam 2000 The Blazing Comet In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 141 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Islam Rafiqul 2000 Nazrul In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 113 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Poverty Translated by Chowdhury Kabir 8 July 2006 Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 8 July 2006 Khan Zillur R 1985 Islam and Bengali Nationalism Asian Survey 25 8 834 851 doi 10 2307 2644113 ISSN 0004 4687 JSTOR 2644113 Kamal Nashid 11 July 2015 Nazrul Islam s Islamic songs The Daily Star Retrieved 23 July 2015 Islam Rafiqul 2000 Nazrul In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 115 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Hossen Iftikhar 25 May 2018 Spreading the passion and enthusiasm of Kazi Nazrul Islam The Daily Observer Retrieved 3 July 2018 Field Garrett 22 March 2017 Modernizing Composition Sinhala Song Poetry and Politics in Twentieth Century Sri Lanka Univ of California Press pp 101 ISBN 9780520294714 kazi nazrul islam radio The Daily Star 24 May 2003 Amin Sonia Nishat 1996 The World of Muslim Women in Colonial Bengal 1876 1939 BRILL p 106 ISBN 978 90 04 10642 0 a b Huda Mohammad Nurul 2000 Nazrul s Personlore In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 314 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Ahsanuzzaman Ahmed No Nora s in Popular Bangla Literature PDF IB Sen society Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 8 July 2006 Islam Kazi Nazrul 2000 Barangana The Courtesan Rebel and Other Poems Translated by Chakravarthy Basudha New Delhi Sahitya Akademi pp 52 54 ISBN 978 81 260 0607 6 Goswami Jay Guru 1978 Svabhabakabi Gobindadasera jibani o sahitya bicara in Bengali Sailasri Laibreri Goswami Karumamaya 1990 Aspects of Nazrul Songs Dhaka Nazrul Institute pp 178 179 OCLC 23904256 Moniruzzaman Mohammad 2000 Interaction of Cultures and Kazi Nazrul Islam In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 149 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 a b Bardhan Protik 29 May 2014 Kazi Nazrul Islam Voice of Bengali Muslims and Secular Nationhood Prothom Alo Archived from the original on 4 July 2018 Retrieved 4 July 2018 Islam Rafiqul 24 May 2002 The Champion of a Modern and Peaceful Islam The Daily Star Archived from the original on 26 November 2010 Retrieved 26 March 2016 via nazrul org Khan Salimullah 29 August 2015 Reading Nazrul Islam after Walter Benjamin The Daily Star Archived from the original on 22 October 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2016 Nazrul Islam all the same faced condemnation and stiff resistance from all quarters Brits Hindus and Muslims alike 10 key events in Kazi Nazrul s life The Daily Star Retrieved 26 February 2016 Kamrunnessa Azad 2001 Dharmiya Chetonay Nazrul Nazrul Institute Dhaka 1999 pp 173 174 Nazrul unique creator of devotional songs New Age Retrieved 25 May 2020 Islam Nazrul Arefin Md Shamsul 21 November 2017 Nazrul s Contributions in Equality and Egalitarianism Twenty First Century Perspective PDF International Conference on Nazrul in Twenty First Century ICNTFC 2017 Uttara University pp 1 19 SSRN 3079968 Roger L Bakewell J eds 2011 Islam Kazi Nazrul Chambers Biographical Dictionary 9th ed Chambers Harrap Retrieved 5 March 2016 and wrote more than 500 devotional Hindu songs Najrul Islam ম সলম ন বল নজর ল র শ য ম সঙ গ ত ব য ন The Times of India in Bengali Retrieved 2 September 2022 Shafiqul Islam Mohammad 29 May 2010 I belong to the world The Daily Star Archived from the original on 4 July 2018 Retrieved 4 July 2018 Moniruzzaman Mohammad 2000 Interaction of Cultures and Kazi Nazrul Islam In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute pp 153 54 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Huda Mohammad Nurul 2000 Nazrul s Personlore In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute pp 306 307 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 a b Mallick Sadya Afreen 28 August 2015 Nazrul s tryst with Bengali theatre The Daily Star Archived from the original on 4 July 2018 Retrieved 5 March 2016 Islam Rafiqul 2000 Nazrul Islam In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 117 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 The grave of National Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam on the Dhaka University Central Mosque premises The Daily Observer 28 August 2015 Retrieved 5 March 2016 a b Kamal Sajed 2000 Kazi Nazrul Islam A Chronology of Life In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 325 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 Huda Muhammad Nurul 2001 Nazrul s Aesthetics and Other Aspects Nazrul Institute p 129 10 key events in Kazi Nazrul s life The Daily Star 27 August 2015 Retrieved 5 February 2016 a b c Kamal Sajed 2000 Kazi Nazrul Islam A Chronology of Life In Mohammad Nurul Huda ed Nazrul An Evaluation Dhaka Nazrul Institute p 326 ISBN 978 984 555 167 0 HR Channel 10 July 2017 Kazi Nazrul Islam a documentary 1956 1957 retrieved 29 June 2018 Director Manmath Roy Sen Saibal 6 January 2012 Political mud slinging upsets Kazi Nazrul s family The Times of India Archived from the original on 2 April 2017 Retrieved 6 March 2016 References to demise of Heads of foreign States or eminent international personalities 16 October 2007 Archived from the original on 25 March 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Kumar Das Subrata Nazrul in the eyes of Benoykumar The Daily Star Retrieved 26 February 2016 Kazi Nazrul Islam Rebel and Lover The Independent Dhaka Archived from the original on 6 July 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2016 The rebel poet Kazi Nazrul Islam was crowned in 1972 as the national poet of Bangladesh Bangladesh Nazrul Sena Archived from the original on 11 January 2010 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Nazrul at CSUN The Daily Star Retrieved 27 February 2016 Nazrul on the global stage The Daily Start Retrieved 27 February 2016 A unique symbol of secularism President says of the rebel poet Nazrul s birthday celebrated Banglanews24 com 25 May 2011 Archived from the original on 10 November 2013 Nazrul s works translated in Spanish and Portuguese The Daily Star 20 February 2016 Archived from the original on 4 July 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2016 Karwan Bazar veg traders rout out Rajuk eviction team The Daily Star Retrieved 6 April 2016 block the nearby Kazi Nazrul Islam Avenue Anuradha Mukherjee appointed as new vice chancellor of Kazi Nazrul Islam University The Times of India 24 November 2012 Archived from the original on 4 February 2018 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Murder of Nazrul univ student sparks protest The Daily Star 11 March 2016 Archived from the original on 29 June 2018 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Nazrul Tirtha a hub of cultural exchange with Bangladesh The Business Standard 26 May 2014 Archived from the original on 29 June 2018 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Kazi Nazrul Islam s 121st Birthday Google 25 May 2020 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Kazi Nazrul Islam Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kazi Nazrul Islam Works by or about Kazi Nazrul Islam at Internet Archive Works by Nazrul Islam Kazi at Google Books Kazi Nazrul Islam Kazi Nazrul Islam Poem Portals Bangladesh Biography Poetry 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